Canto

 1     9|   consented to forego~My life to scape from him, reflection made,~
 2    17|         thee, my sun!~I trust to scape, as hither I have spied;~
 3    17| uninjured, see the wretch again~'Scape, to the scandal of the warlike
 4    20|        ears dismay.~Let him not 'scape by such a murderous deed;~
 5    20|        she desire that I~Should 'scape from slavery, so she went
 6    24|      will be rare fortune if he 'scape.~ ~ XLII~So many women,
 7    24|          mighty stroke he cannot scape or fend.~ ~ LXIV~In the
 8    24|        LXIV~In the end he cannot scape one downright blow,~Which
 9    25| Bradamant had spoken,~Anxious to scape from that embarrassment.~
10    27|      doom to shun.~ ~ XXVII~Who 'scape one peril, into other fly,~
11    29|          if any way, remained~To scape that wilful man, untouched,
12    32|      have I my life to reave,~To scape from this o'erwhelming wretchedness.~
13    37|         summer sun.~There is no 'scape; for straightways of our
14    40|         cure for all, whereby to scape~Out of this trouble I, meseems,
15    41|         And, should he land, and scape that mortal scaith,~To be
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